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Wrist gay

wrist gay

  • 19-03-2012, 21:07#51

    Non-member

    Re: Tattoo on inside of a mans wrist, gay/girlie or ok?

    Well my threads gone tits up lol.

    Im going to get it done and if that makes me gay im happy with that lol.


  • 19-03-2012, 21:10#52

    Non-member

    Re: Tattoo on inside of a mans wrist, gay/girlie or ok?

    Tits

    My willy, that's where it's gone.

  • 19-03-2012, 21:20#53

    Non-member

    Re: Tattoo on inside of a mans wrist, gay/girlie or ok?

    Funny enough i didnt undergo the need to note that again! Lol


  • 19-03-2012, 21:27#54

    Non-member

    Re: Tattoo on inside of a mans wrist, gay/girlie or ok?

    Originally Posted by D4WNO
    Lol! That isn't a good idea, he'd be trying to show me "the boost" all the time!!
    and i had the impression ads was a turbo on heat guy....c'mon dude get making them babies you sexual cockney love god..

  • 19-03-2012, 22:58#55

    Non-member

    Re: Tattoo on inside of a mans wrist, gay/girlie or ok?

    Originally Posted by Alastair

    There used to be a nightclub on Belmont Road in Chicago tucked between a grilled cheese restaurant and cellphone repair shop. The windows were blacked out and featured imaginative art, the facade was adorned in black and white tiles, and queenly queens often — and rightfully so — skipped the long line that backed up under the train tracks of the L’s Belmont Station. The interior was exceptionally black, the walls painted inky and the accent lights deep shades of indigo and crimson. There were three bars, the biggest of which ran the entire length of the right-side wall and featured above it a huge mural of elegant partygoers, clad in tuxedos and ballgowns and sipping from coupe glasses. There were, of course, several shirtless, muscular men painted into the scene as good. They didn’t serve as a juxtaposition though; the big gay party in the painting intimated the energy of the 40-year-old bar it presided over.

    This alternative, loud, bawdy vacuum was Chicago’s legendary Berlin Nightclub. It was a venue dedicated to welcoming the new, especially in the form of dwell performance. Without question, Berlin’s Saturday night show was one of the foremost regularly scheduled drag shows in Chica

    Martin Sorrondeguy is a living legend within the DIY hardcore punk scene. But he is no stranger to discrimination himself, and draws on his have past experiences in his music as a way of raising awareness. From 1991 to 1998, as part of the Chicago political DIY punk scene, Los Crudos struggled to raise awareness on issues of racism and economic inequality due to their Latino background. In 1998, Martin started an all-out queer punk project called Limp Wrist in a Philadelphia basement. They played their first show in 1999 at Stalag 13 in West Philly.

    In 2010 I took the chance to speak with Martin about his time in Los Crudos and comprehend more about the communication of Limp Wrist beyond the abrasive music and satirical lyrics that I love so much.

    Let’s begin with an introduction to you. Who are you? How old are you? You were born in Uruguay but located to the USA in an early age. How did you grown up as a latino-kid and what brought you to hardcore punk subculture?

    My name is Martin Sorrondeguy. I am 42 years old [ed. born December 3, 1967]. I was born in Uruguay and was raised in the US. I came into hardcore punk when I was a teenager. I wanted something different than what was exis

    What Do Limp Wrists Own To Do With Homosexual Men?

    After encouraging fathers to “punch” sons who exhibit stereotypically gay behavior, North Carolina pastor Sean Harris said on Tuesday that he should have chosen different words. In his April 28 sermon, Harris said, “Dads, the second you see your son dropping the limp wrist, you walk over there and crack that wrist.” Why do we associate a limp wrist with male homosexuality?

    It probably goes back to ancient Rome. Ancient rhetoric teachers discouraged limp-wristedness during public speaking. This had nothing to do with homosexuality—the Romans didn’t consider gay sex, per se, unmanly. A limp wrist was consideration to betray a more general lack of masculine control over the body and its various urges. In the 18th century, however, Europeans came to think of homosexuality as a character trait rather than an occasional habit, and gay sex became the antithesis of manliness. Physiognomists, who believed that physical appearance and mannerisms were evidence of one’s character, appear to hold picked up on the ancient Roman belief that real men had rock-solid wrists. During this period, limp wrists came to signify not just ill discipline, but vari

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